Berliner Boersenzeitung - Manufacturers getting to grips with airless tyres

EUR -
AED 4.277337
AFN 76.971308
ALL 96.539099
AMD 443.649903
ANG 2.084865
AOA 1068.023931
ARS 1670.170535
AUD 1.754436
AWG 2.096448
AZN 1.9742
BAM 1.955579
BBD 2.345435
BDT 142.473912
BGN 1.955579
BHD 0.43905
BIF 3440.711472
BMD 1.164693
BND 1.50853
BOB 8.047091
BRL 6.335467
BSD 1.164469
BTN 104.700177
BWP 15.471253
BYN 3.347922
BYR 22827.992243
BZD 2.342036
CAD 1.6108
CDF 2599.595791
CHF 0.937064
CLF 0.02737
CLP 1073.707555
CNY 8.234499
CNH 8.234698
COP 4424.200415
CRC 568.835767
CUC 1.164693
CUP 30.864377
CVE 110.25255
CZK 24.206977
DJF 207.366584
DKK 7.473932
DOP 74.531584
DZD 151.064942
EGP 55.309188
ERN 17.470402
ETB 180.625704
FJD 2.632731
FKP 0.873164
GBP 0.874723
GEL 3.138845
GGP 0.873164
GHS 13.246504
GIP 0.873164
GMD 85.022604
GNF 10118.85737
GTQ 8.919993
GYD 243.632489
HKD 9.06683
HNL 30.670537
HRK 7.536379
HTG 152.442786
HUF 381.91584
IDR 19438.210099
ILS 3.76861
IMP 0.873164
INR 104.758942
IQD 1525.527736
IRR 49048.181833
ISK 149.057092
JEP 0.873164
JMD 186.388953
JOD 0.825787
JPY 180.84192
KES 150.63299
KGS 101.852136
KHR 4662.473509
KMF 491.500098
KPW 1048.223551
KRW 1716.537243
KWD 0.357526
KYD 0.97049
KZT 588.913499
LAK 25252.148505
LBP 104281.524439
LKR 359.18944
LRD 204.956856
LSL 19.736071
LTL 3.439037
LVL 0.704511
LYD 6.330285
MAD 10.755485
MDL 19.813763
MGA 5194.413442
MKD 61.63304
MMK 2445.387464
MNT 4131.602963
MOP 9.338146
MRU 46.437756
MUR 53.657551
MVR 17.951252
MWK 2019.271982
MXN 21.202091
MYR 4.788046
MZN 74.435387
NAD 19.736071
NGN 1688.89839
NIO 42.855161
NOK 11.772943
NPR 167.520083
NZD 2.015268
OMR 0.44693
PAB 1.164568
PEN 3.914358
PGK 4.941442
PHP 68.676135
PKR 326.469235
PLN 4.229415
PYG 8009.095606
QAR 4.244621
RON 5.092734
RSD 117.386745
RUB 89.464862
RWF 1694.308677
SAR 4.371215
SBD 9.586117
SCR 15.776956
SDG 700.559902
SEK 10.953447
SGD 1.508575
SHP 0.873822
SLE 27.6056
SLL 24423.037799
SOS 664.324984
SRD 44.990951
STD 24106.803566
STN 24.497234
SVC 10.189849
SYP 12877.826534
SZL 19.720773
THB 37.124621
TJS 10.684394
TMT 4.088074
TND 3.416014
TOP 2.804302
TRY 49.551599
TTD 7.894109
TWD 36.442065
TZS 2841.579126
UAH 48.88768
UGX 4119.534819
USD 1.164693
UYU 45.544857
UZS 13931.426851
VES 296.474979
VND 30701.32018
VUV 141.34849
WST 3.247877
XAF 655.882937
XAG 0.019966
XAU 0.000277
XCD 3.147643
XCG 2.098763
XDR 0.815708
XOF 655.882937
XPF 119.331742
YER 277.837661
ZAR 19.726999
ZMK 10483.641498
ZMW 26.92296
ZWL 375.030826
  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    78.35

    0%

  • SCS

    -0.0900

    16.14

    -0.56%

  • CMSD

    -0.0700

    23.25

    -0.3%

  • RYCEF

    -0.0500

    14.62

    -0.34%

  • CMSC

    -0.0500

    23.43

    -0.21%

  • NGG

    -0.5000

    75.41

    -0.66%

  • GSK

    -0.1600

    48.41

    -0.33%

  • VOD

    -0.1630

    12.47

    -1.31%

  • BTI

    -1.0300

    57.01

    -1.81%

  • RIO

    -0.6700

    73.06

    -0.92%

  • RELX

    -0.2200

    40.32

    -0.55%

  • BCE

    0.3300

    23.55

    +1.4%

  • JRI

    0.0400

    13.79

    +0.29%

  • BCC

    -1.2100

    73.05

    -1.66%

  • BP

    -1.4000

    35.83

    -3.91%

  • AZN

    0.1500

    90.18

    +0.17%

Manufacturers getting to grips with airless tyres
Manufacturers getting to grips with airless tyres / Photo: François WALSCHAERTS - AFP

Manufacturers getting to grips with airless tyres

Airless tyres that never go flat or need to be inflated: It's a decades-long dream that manufacturers hope to turn into a reality soon, but for truck drivers first.

Text size:

The challenges that the technology faces were put on display at a Goodyear test track in Luxembourg, where a group of journalists put a Tesla equipped with airless tyres through its paces.

Instead of being filled with air, the tyres have a web of spokes that keep the wheels firm and give them a see-through look.

The thin layer of rubber gripping the asphalt has a gargantuan physical challenge to meet: supporting the weight of the car and absorbing shocks as well as standard pneumatic tyres for thousands and thousands of kilometres.

That challenge is being overcome: the tyre's rubber and plastic structure resisted the huge stress as the car banked into the track's tight turns.

The ride is smooth but the grip is not as good as on conventional tyres -- and they are noisier.

The tyres were tested for 120,000 kilometres (75,000 miles) at speeds of up to 160 kph in both scorching temperatures as well as snow, said Michael Rachita, who heads up Goodyear's efforts to develop airless tyres.

"The most obvious advantage is that it's puncture proof," said Rachita.

"It will never run flat, you could drive over any nail and expect not to lose performance," he added.

Rachita said airless tyres will also be maintenance free for drivers as they will never need to check and adjust air pressure.

He said a second generation of airless tyres that are lighter, quieter and roll better are in the works.

- Gradual transition seen -

Michelin has released the Tweel, but it is for construction vehicles rather than cars where the demands in terms of driving performance are much greater.

The French firm has also unveiled the Uptis which it is developing with US car manufacturer General Motors, and which it hopes can make the jump from auto shows to showrooms next year.

Its researchers are working on a cocktail of fibreglass and resin to hold the rubber onto the honeycomb structure of the new tyre.

But Michelin's CEO Florent Menegaux doesn't expect airless tyres to squeeze out regular tyres anytime soon.

"We're going continue to have air tyres for several decades," he said.

Goodyear, which submitted its first patent on airless tyre technology in 1982, has recently put its food down on the accelerator in terms of research and development.

The US firm aims to have a maintenance-free and long-lasting airless tyre for cars by the end of the decade.

It already has an early version for shuttle buses and automated delivery vehicles on university campuses.

Bridgestone also hopes to have an airless tyre ready within a decade, having already tested early versions on utility vehicles.

Other manufacturers are more sceptical that airless tyres will ever offer comparable shock absorption as traditional tyres and the noise can be reduced sufficiently.

"They aren't a viable solution and I don't expect they will become one," a Continental researcher, Gerrit Bolz, said at a tyre convention in 2017.

- Environmental benefits, economic concerns -

But independent researcher Ulf Sandberg at the Swedish National Road and Transport Research Institute, which is working on an airless tyre for trucks, believes they will eventually become a viable alternative.

"I believe that sooner or later airless tyres could take over," he told AFP.

"If rolling resistance is reduced by 50 percent, it would increase the range of vehicles by 25 percent, and could be extremely valuable" for car manufacturers, particularly for electric vehicles where range is a key concern.

Airless tyres could prove to be environmentally beneficial as they could last the entire lifetime of most vehicles and could then be recycled or retreaded for a second life.

But manufacturers may not be burning rubber to bring airless tyres to market because they also pose threats to their business model, said Sandberg.

A switch to airless tyres would strand the manufacturing equipment used for pneumatic tyres, a heavy cost for the companies to bear.

Given the longevity of the airless tyres, companies would be making less of them.

Goodyear's vice president for product development in Europe, Xavier Fraipont, acknowledged that airless tyres requires a "rethinking our business model, of rethinking our manufacturing".

Yet the possibility of gaining a lead on competitors or being left behind by an affordable and high-performing airless tyre for the consumer market keeps their research rolling forward.

(K.Müller--BBZ)